DocumentCode :
1735374
Title :
Experimental and theoretical determination of the transient radiation characteristics of a high power water vortex stabilized argon arc lamp
Author :
Thrum, T. ; Hewett, A. ; Camm, D.
fYear :
2001
Firstpage :
292
Abstract :
Summary form only given, as follows. An investigation of the transient characteristics for a high power high-pressure argon arc stabilized by vortexing gas and a water wall in LTE is presented. The 30 cm long arc is operated in a current range from 50 to 400 A and is short circuited for brief durations (typically 100 /spl mu/s to 2 ms) such that the arc does not extinguish. Transient arc voltage, arc current, and radiant intensity at 900 nm resulting from this arc lamp notching are recorded. The arc is shorted using a crowbar circuit consisting of several high power IGBTs in parallel, chosen for their ruggedness and fast response times in the order of 500 ns. The arc is operated in such way that a quartz envelope is cooled on the inside by a spiraling film of deionized water. This effective cooling allows for electrical, input power into the arc lamp of up to 300 kW. The experimental setup is described, with reference to electrical, water, and gas system design and results are interpreted with reference to expected arc behaviour. Experimental results are compared to a numerical model describing transient characteristics of a cylindrical argon high-pressure arc column. Resonance lines are assumed fully trapped in this model. All other arc radiation losses are assumed optically thin in this model. The numerical modeling approach is discussed and verified by comparison with experimental results. A close agreement between theoretical results and experimentally observed transient radiation characteristics and arc voltage is found. This indicates the radiation loss term in the model is represented with sufficient accuracy. This study is aimed at determining a maximum "arc-interruption-interval" that does not require re-ignition of the plasma. Such brief interruption of the radiative output allows for various in-situ diagnostics on samples during processing with the high-power Vortek arc lamp.
Keywords :
arc lamps; arcs (electric); argon; losses; numerical analysis; plasma diagnostics; plasma flow; plasma thermodynamics; vortices; 100 mus to 2 ms; 30 cm; 300 kW; 50 to 400 A; 500 ns; 900 nm; Ar; Ar arc lamp; arc behaviour; arc current; arc lamp; arc lamp notching; arc radiation losses; arc voltage; arc-interruption-interval; crowbar circuit; current range; deionized water; effective cooling; electrical input power; fast response times; gas system design; high power IGBTs; high power high-pressure Ar arc; high power water vortex stabilized Ar arc lamp; high-power Vortek arc lamp; high-pressure arc column; in-situ diagnostics; numerical model; numerical modeling approach; plasma; quartz envelope; radiant intensity; radiation characteristics; radiation loss term; re-ignition; resonance lines; spiraling film; transient arc voltage; transient characteristics; transient radiation characteristics; Argon; Circuits; Cooling; Delay; Insulated gate bipolar transistors; Numerical models; Optical losses; Resonance; Voltage; Water;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Pulsed Power Plasma Science, 2001. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts
Conference_Location :
Las Vegas, NV, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7141-0
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PPPS.2001.960948
Filename :
960948
Link To Document :
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